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Software Testing

Software Testing. Making Software Work. Today ' s Topics Why testing? Some basic definitions Kinds of testing Test-driven development Code reviews (not testing) Today is a look ahead to CS 362 If you ' re already taking CS362, I apologize for the redundancy!. Why Testing?.

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Software Testing

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  1. Software Testing

  2. Making Software Work • Today's Topics • Why testing? • Some basic definitions • Kinds of testing • Test-driven development • Code reviews (not testing) • Today is a look ahead to CS 362 • If you're already taking CS362, I apologize for the redundancy!

  3. Why Testing? • Ideally: we'd provecodecorrect, using formalmathematical techniques (with a computer, not chalk) • Extremely difficult: for some trivial programs (100 lines) and many small (5K lines) programs • Simply not practical to prove correctness in most cases – often not even for safety or mission critical code

  4. Why Testing? • Nearly ideally: use symbolic or abstract model checking to provethat a modelis correct • Automatically extract a mathematical abstraction from code • Prove properties with model over all possible executions • In practice, can work well for very simple properties ("this program never crashes in this particular way"), of some programs, but can't handle complex properties ("this is a working file system") • Doesn't work well for programs with complex data structures (like a file system) • Can't validate your requirements either!

  5. As a last resort… • … we can actually run the program, to see if it works • This is software testing • Always necessary, even when you can prove correctness – because the proof is seldom directly tied to the actual code that runs "Beware of bugs in the above code; I have only proved it correct, not tried it" – Knuth

  6. NOT a last resort… • Testing is a critical part of every software development effort • Can too easily be left as an afterthought, after it is expensive to correct faults and when deadlines are pressing • The more code that has been written when a fault is detected, the more code that may need to be changed to fix the fault • Consider a key design flaw: better to detect with a small prototype, or after implementation is "finished"? • May "have to ship" the code even though it has fatal flaws

  7. Testing and Reviews in Processes • Waterfall Requirements analysis Prototyping Design Implementation Testing Operation

  8. Testing and Reviews in Processes • Spiral Draft a menu ofprogram designs Analyze risk &prototype Draft a menu ofarchitecture designs Analyze risk &prototype Draft a menu ofrequirements Analyze risk &prototype Establishrequirements Plan Establisharchitecture Plan Establishprogram design Operation Testing Implementation

  9. Testing and Reviews in Processes • Agile Do "spike" to evaluate & control risk Customer provides "stories"(short requirement snippets) Prioritizestories and plan Write/run/modifyunit tests Operation Implement System and acceptance tests

  10. Testing saves lives and money Ariane 5:exception-handlingbug : forced selfdestruct on maidenflight (64-bit to 16-bitconversion: about370 million $ lost) • NIST report, "The Economic Impacts of Inadequate Infrastructure for Software Testing" (2002) • Inadequate software testing costs the US alone between $22 and $59 billion annually • Better approaches could cut this amount in half • Major failures: Ariane 5 explosion, Mars Polar Lander, Intel's Pentium FDIV bug • Insufficient testing of safety-critical software can cost lives: THERAC-25 radiation machine: 3 dead • We want our programs to be reliable • Testing is how, in most cases, we find out if they are Mars PolarLander crashsite? THERAC-25 design

  11. Testing is as Glorious as Development • Testing used to be thought as of grunt work • With the advent of unit testing, regression testing, automated testing, and the necessary “closeness” between requirements and testing… • Testing is no longer just grunt work • You need the same technical skills and abilities as developers do

  12. Today's Topic • Why testing? • Some basic definitions • Kinds of testing • Test-driven development • Code reviews (not testing)

  13. Basic Definitions: Testing • What is software testing? • Running a program • Generally, in order to find faults (bugs) • Could be in the code • Or in the spec • Or in the documentation • Or in the test case…

  14. Terms: Test case vs. Test Suite • Test case (or test): one execution of the program, that may expose a bug • Test suite: a set of executions of a program, grouped together • A test suite is made of test cases • Tester: a program (or a person!) that generates tests

  15. Terms: Coverage • Coverage measures or metrics • Abstraction of "what a test suite tests" in a structural sense • Common measures: • Statement coverage • a.k.a line coverage or basic block coverage • Ideally, all of the test cases covers every line of code • Decision coverage • Which boolean expressions in control structures evaluated to both true and false during suite execution • Path coverage • Which paths through a program's control flow graph are taken in the test suite • Ideally, every branch in the code is covered! • Mutation coverage • Ability to detect random variations to the code

  16. Today's Topic • Why testing? • Some basic definitions • Kinds of testing • Test-driven development • Code reviews (not testing)

  17. Kinds of testing • Whitebox • Blackbox • Unit • Integration • System • Acceptance • Regression (These aren’t mutually exclusive!)

  18. Terms: Black Box Testing • Black box testing • Treats a program or system as a • That is, testing that does not look at source code or internal structure of the system • Send a program a stream of inputs, observe the outputs, decide if the system passed or failed the test • Abstracts away the internals – a useful perspective for integration and system testing • Sometimes you don't have access to source code, and can make little use of object code • True black box? Access only over a network

  19. Terms: White Box Testing • White box testing • Opens up the box! • (also known as glass box, clear box, or structural testing) • Use source code (or other structure beyond the input/output spec.) to design test cases

  20. Stages of Testing • Unit testing is the first phase, done by developers of modules • Integration testingcombines unit-tested modules and tests how they interact • System testingtests a whole program to make sure it meets requirements • Acceptance testing by users to see if system meets actual use requirements

  21. Stages of Testing: Unit Testing • Unit testing is the first phase, mostly done by developers of modules • Typically the earliest type of testing done • Unit could be as small as a single function or method • Often relies on stubs to represent other modules and incomplete code • Unit testing tools are available for most popular languages, for example: • JUnit(http://junit.org) • Simpletest for PHP (http://simpletest.org) • YUI test for Javascript (http://yuilibrary.com/projects/yuitest/) • Python and Ruby have unit testing built into their language packages

  22. Stages of Testing: Integration Testing • Integration testingcombines unit-tested modules and tests how they interact • Relies on having completed units • After unit testing, before system testing • Test cases focus on interfaces between components, and assemblies of multiple components • Often more formal (test plan presentations) than unit testing

  23. Stages of Testing: System Testing • System testingtests a whole program to make sure it meets requirements • After integration testing • Focuses on "breaking the system" • Defects in the completed product, not just in how components interact • Checks quality of requirements as well as the system • Often includes stress testing, goes beyond bounds of well-defined behavior

  24. An aspect of System Testing: Functional Testing • Functional testing is when a developer tests a program from a "user's" perspective – does it do what it should? • It's a different mindset than unit testing, which often proceeds from the perspective of other parts of the program • Module spec/interface, not user interaction • Sort of a fuzzy line – consider a file system – how different is the use by a program and use of UNIX commands at a prompt by a user? • Building inspector does "unit testing"; you (or user), walking through the house to see if its livable, perform "functional testing" • Kick the tires vs. take it for a spin?

  25. Stages of Testing: Acceptance Testing • Acceptance testing by users to see if system meets actual use requirements • Black box testing • By end-users to determine if the system produced really meets their needs • May revise requirements/goals as much as find bugs in the code/system

  26. Appropriate at all times: Regression Testing • Regression testing • Changes can break code, reintroduce old bugs • Things that used to work may stop working (e.g., because of another "fix") – software regresses • Usually a set of cases that have failed (& then succeeded) in the past • Finding small regressions is an ongoing research area – analyze dependencies ". . . as a consequence of the introduction of new bugs, program maintenance requires far more system testing. . . . Theoretically, after each fix one must run the entire batch of test cases previously run against the system, to ensure that it has not been damaged in an obscure way. In practice, such regression testing must indeed approximate this theoretical idea, and it is very costly." - Brooks, The Mythical Man-Month

  27. Today's Topic • Why testing? • Some basic definitions • Kinds of testing • Test-driven development • Code reviews (not testing)

  28. Test-Driven Development • One way to make sure code is tested as early as possible is to write test cases before the code • Idea arising from Extreme Programming and often used in agile development • Write (automated) test cases first • Then write the code to satisfy tests

  29. Test-Driven Development • How to add a feature to a program, in test-driven development • Add a test case that fails, but would succeed with the new feature implemented • As a corollary, your interfaces, inputs, and outputs need to be well-defined! • Run all tests, make sure only the new test fails • Write code to implement the new feature • Rerun all tests, making sure the new test succeeds (and no others break)

  30. Test-Driven Development Cycle

  31. Example 1: What should I test ? Consider this method (in Python): What would you test? gamesfile with empty string gamesfile that doesn’t exist on disk The data in gamesfile: A file with Windows style linefeeds vs. Unix Records with too many commas Records with not enough commas #!/usr/bin/python … def readfile(gamesfile): fh = open(gamesfile, "r”) print "Games released in 2013:" for line in fh: record = line.split(",") if record[2] == '2013\n': print record[1] fh.close() Data in file: 0,Retrovirus,2013 1,Bastion,2011 2,VVVVVV,2010

  32. 5’6” 5’ 6” 5 6” 7” 5’ 5’6 15’ 12113” Example 2: What should I test? function feet_to_inches(input) { var inches = 0; var matchResult = input.match(/(\d+)'\s*(\d*)"/i); if (typeof matchResult[1] !== 'undefined') { inches += parseInt(matchResult[1]) * 12; } if (typeof matchResult[2] !== 'undefined') { inches += parseInt(matchResult[2]); } return inches; } Consider this method (in Javascript): What would you test?

  33. Test-Driven Development Benefits • Results in lots of useful test cases • A very large regression set • Forces attention to actual behavior of software: observable & controllable behavior • Only write code as needed to pass tests • And may get good coverage of paths through the program, since they are written in order to pass the tests • Reduces temptation to tailor tests to idiosyncratic behaviors of implementation • Testing is a first-class activity in this kind of development

  34. Test-Driven Development Problems • Need institutional support • Difficult to integrate with a waterfall development • Management may wonder why so muchtime is spent writing tests, not code • Lots of test cases may create false confidence • If developers have written all tests, may be blind spots due to false assumptions made in coding and in testing, which are tightly coupled • Can be a poor use of time • If you aren’t exactly sure what modules or data structures you need, you might spend a lot of time modifying tests instead of doing it right the first time

  35. Exhaustive vs. Representative Testing • Can we test everything? • File system is a library, called by other components of some flight software Operation Result mkdir ("/eng", …) SUCCESS mkdir ("/data", …) SUCCESS creat ("/data/image01", …) SUCCESS creat ("/eng/fsw/code", …) ENOENT mkdir ("/data/telemetry", …) SUCCESS unlink ("/data/image01") SUCCESS File system / /eng /data image01 /telemetry

  36. Example: File System Testing • How hard would it be to just try "all" the possibilities? • Consider only core 7 operations (mkdir, rmdir, creat, open, close, read, write) • Most of these take either a file name or a numeric argument, or both • Even for a "reasonable" (but not provably safe) limitation of the parameters, there are 26610executions of length 10 to try • Not a realistic possibility (unless we have 1012 years to test)

  37. Today's Topic • Why testing? • Some basic definitions • Kinds of testing • Test-driven development • Code Reviews (not testing)

  38. Not Testing: Code Reviews • Not exactly testing, but an important method for finding bugs and determining the quality of code • Code walkthrough: developer leads a review team through code • Informal, focus on code • Code inspection: review team checksagainst a list of concerns • Team members prepare in advancein many cases • Team moderator usually leads

  39. Not Testing: Code Reviews • Code inspections have been found to be one of the most effective practices for finding faults • Some experiments show removal of 67-85% of defects via inspections • Some consider XP's pair programming as a kind of "code review" process, but it's not quite the same • Why? • Can review/walkthrough requirementsand design documents, not just code!

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